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I have a batch file that starts with elevated privileges (my installer spawns it), but at a certain point I need to run a command as the original user who started my installer (i.e. drop from the elevated privileges).

Is it possible to do so?

2 Answers 2

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You can run a command with restricted privileges with:

runas /trustlevel:0x20000 "YourCommandHere"

You should provide the absolute path to your command including any arguments in double quotes as an argument to runas.

If you would like to run more than one command with restricted privileges, you can put them in a separate batch file and run it with:

runas /trustlevel:0x20000 "cmd /C PathToYourBatchFile"

Anyway, this will open a new console with restricted privileges. You also have to use this syntax whenever you wish to run with restricted privileges an internal command (like copy, del, etc.) as these are provided by the command line interpreter and do not have an associated path.

Note that 0x20000 is the trust level of standard users. You can list other available trust levels by running

runas /showtrustlevels
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  • Hm, this seems to have a slightly different behavior than I expected. Running cmd.exe normally, the titlebar shows only C:\Windows\System32\cmd.exe, running it with elevated privileges, it shows Administrator: C:\Windows\System32\cmd.exe, starting it with runas /trustlevel:0x20000 cmd.exe, it shows Administrator: cmd (running as sashoalm-PC\sashoalm with restricted privileges). As you can see, it is not the same as running it normally, in the sense of 'run as original user', do you have an idea what the differences could be?
    – sashoalm
    Commented Nov 26, 2013 at 13:55
  • @sashoalm the new console is still associated with the Administrator account, but it runs with the privileges of a standard user (even if your user account has administrator privileges). To run as your original user, have a look at the other options of runas.
    – GOTO 0
    Commented Nov 26, 2013 at 14:05
  • Process explorer lists both processes as having user name sashoalm-PC\sashoalm. My user account is the administrator account. So if the user name is the same, and the privileges are the same, why is cmd's titlebar reporting a difference?
    – sashoalm
    Commented Nov 26, 2013 at 14:16
  • Well, Windows allows the same user to run different applications with different levels of trustworthy. This is explained here: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb625957.aspx
    – GOTO 0
    Commented Nov 26, 2013 at 14:33
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    As of Windows 11, you have to use the /machine argument as well, e.g., runas /machine:amd64 /trustlevel:0x20000 cmd or you will get error 87. However, this is almost a moot point, because /trustlevel doesn't do what it is supposed to anyway, and never has: although it does disable the administrators group, the integrity level of the new process is improperly set to "high" instead of "medium". Commented Oct 18, 2022 at 7:56
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  1. It's still a privileged program (though restricted) in Task Manager by using this command:

    runas /trustlevel:0x20000 <cmd>
    
  2. You can try the other way, which will make it unprivileged in Task Manager:

    runas /savecred /user:%username% <cmd>
    

    You still need to enter the password once but not every time.

  3. Use explorer.exe to launch the program:

    explorer.exe <cmd>
    

    explorer.exe won't accept arguments for cmd, but you can create a temp script file and lauch it by explorer.exe if arguments are necessary.

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